The Disentanglers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about The Disentanglers.

The Disentanglers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about The Disentanglers.

His heart!

   How Fortune aristophanises
   And how severe the fun of Fate!’

quoted Logan.

‘The odd thing is,’ said Merton, ’that I do believe he has a heart.  I rather like him.  At all events, I think, from what I saw, that a sudden start might set him off at any moment, or an unusual exertion.  And he may go off before I tell him that I can do nothing with you—­’

‘Oh, hang that,’ said Logan, ‘you make me feel like a beastly assassin!’

‘I only want you to understand how the land lies.’  Merton dropped his voice again, ‘He has made a will leaving you everything.’

’Poor old cock!  Look here, I believe I had better write, and say that I’m awfully touched and obliged, but that I can’t come into his views, or break my word, and then, you know, he can just make another will.  It would be a swindle to let him die, and come into his property, and then go dead against his wishes.’

’But it would be all right to give me away, I suppose, and let him understand that I had violated professional confidence?’

‘Only with a member of the firm.  That is no violation.’

‘But then I should have told him that you were a member of the firm.’

‘I’m afraid you should.’

’Logan, you have the ideas of a schoolboy.  I had to be certain as to how you would take it, though, of course, I had a very good guess.  And as to what you say about the chances of his dying and leaving everything where he would not have left it if he had been sure you would act against his wishes—­I believe you are wrong.  What he really cares about is “the name.”  His ghost will put up with your disobedience if the name keeps its old place.  Do you see?’

‘Perhaps you are right,’ said Logan.

’Anyhow, there is no such pressing hurry.  One may bring him round with time.  A curious old survival!  I did not understand all that he said.  There was something about having been thrice at kirk and market since he made his will; and something about not having smelled appleringie for forty years.  What is appleringie?’

Logan laughed.

’It is a sacred Presbyterian herb.  The people keep it in their Bibles and it perfumes the churches.  But look here—­’

He was interrupted by the entrance of a page, who handed to him a letter.  Logan read it and laughed.  ‘I knew it; they are sharp!’ he said, and handed the letter to Merton.  It was from a famous, or infamous, money-lender, offering princely accommodation on terms which Mr. Logan would find easy and reasonable.

‘They have nosed the appleringie, you see,’ he said.

‘But I don’t see,’ said Merton.

’Why the hounds have heard that the old nobleman has been thrice to kirk lately.  And as he had not been there for forty years, they have guessed that he has been making his will.  Scots law has, or used to have, something in it about going thrice to kirk and market after making a will—­disponing they call it—­as a proof of bodily and mental soundness.  So they have spotted the marquis’s pious motives for kirk-going, and guessed that I am his heir.  I say—­’ Logan began to laugh wildly.

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The Disentanglers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.